#美联储重启降息步伐 $ZEC I've seen too many people blame their losses on having too little capital.
What really wipes out an account is never the amount of money, but those impulsive trades based on gut feeling, chasing trends, or gambling it all.
$XNY Recently, I reviewed a case—a trader who started with only 1,500U. This number is insignificant in the market, not even enough for many people’s trial and error.
But in less than 40 days, he grew his account to 80,000U.
No liquidation, no stepping on landmines, and never once chasing the hype.
It wasn’t luck, nor insider information. If you break down his trading records, the whole process is so simple it even seems a bit dull—every trade looked like it was rehearsed in advance.
No going all-in, no jumping in on a pump, and certainly no complicated technical indicators. Just three rules that couldn’t be simpler, but he followed them religiously.
**Rule One: Only execute the plan, don’t follow emotions**
Act only when there’s a signal; no matter how tempting the market, if there’s no signal, stay out.
When others FOMO in, he observes. When others panic and cut losses on a big red candle, he adds to his position as planned.
Market ups and downs are never the problem—acting recklessly is.
**Rule Two: The less capital you have, the less you should go all-in**
You might think with only 1,500U, you have no chance of making it without betting big.
But he did the opposite—never more than 30% of his account in a single trade, the remaining 70% is his safety net.
If the market goes as expected, he adds to his position; if not, he cuts losses and exits.
How much to lose or gain is already written in his plan before opening a trade.
That’s why others get liquidated, but he keeps compounding.
**Rule Three: Only take the profits you can actually get**
If the market gives 10 points, he takes 7 and gets out; if it gives 30, he’s happy with 15.
He never expects to catch the whole move in a single trade, nor does he hope to grab every opportunity.
He only does what can be repeated and stably realized.
Compounding comes not from one big hit, but from consistently taking a piece each time.
Looking back now, there’s nothing flashy about this approach. But very few can actually do it.
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SleepyArbCat
· 3h ago
Simply put, as long as you don't take reckless risks, the longer you survive, the more you earn.
View OriginalReply0
TaxEvader
· 3h ago
To be honest, the real challenge isn't the rules, it's persistence.
Gamblers always want to win it all back in one go, and that's the real pitfall.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropATM
· 4h ago
So true, it's all about discipline.
Small money can grow into big money, the key is not to mess around.
I agree with this logic, simplicity is truly the hardest.
It sounds easy but is incredibly difficult to do.
This is exactly what I need to learn, the 30% position strategy is brilliant.
Everyone fails because of their emotions, no exceptions.
No wonder I've always been flirting with liquidation.
Profit only matters if it can be replicated, that's something to really understand.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainDetective
· 4h ago
Wait, I need to take a closer look at this case of turning 1,500U into 80,000... According to on-chain data, the trading patterns of these accounts with explosive growth are a bit too consistent. The 30% position size is strictly controlled, and the profits are always precisely timed... Are you sure this isn't just a standard narrative made up after the fact?
#美联储重启降息步伐 $ZEC I've seen too many people blame their losses on having too little capital.
What really wipes out an account is never the amount of money, but those impulsive trades based on gut feeling, chasing trends, or gambling it all.
$XNY Recently, I reviewed a case—a trader who started with only 1,500U. This number is insignificant in the market, not even enough for many people’s trial and error.
But in less than 40 days, he grew his account to 80,000U.
No liquidation, no stepping on landmines, and never once chasing the hype.
$BOB How did he do it?
It wasn’t luck, nor insider information. If you break down his trading records, the whole process is so simple it even seems a bit dull—every trade looked like it was rehearsed in advance.
No going all-in, no jumping in on a pump, and certainly no complicated technical indicators. Just three rules that couldn’t be simpler, but he followed them religiously.
**Rule One: Only execute the plan, don’t follow emotions**
Act only when there’s a signal; no matter how tempting the market, if there’s no signal, stay out.
When others FOMO in, he observes. When others panic and cut losses on a big red candle, he adds to his position as planned.
Market ups and downs are never the problem—acting recklessly is.
**Rule Two: The less capital you have, the less you should go all-in**
You might think with only 1,500U, you have no chance of making it without betting big.
But he did the opposite—never more than 30% of his account in a single trade, the remaining 70% is his safety net.
If the market goes as expected, he adds to his position; if not, he cuts losses and exits.
How much to lose or gain is already written in his plan before opening a trade.
That’s why others get liquidated, but he keeps compounding.
**Rule Three: Only take the profits you can actually get**
If the market gives 10 points, he takes 7 and gets out; if it gives 30, he’s happy with 15.
He never expects to catch the whole move in a single trade, nor does he hope to grab every opportunity.
He only does what can be repeated and stably realized.
Compounding comes not from one big hit, but from consistently taking a piece each time.
Looking back now, there’s nothing flashy about this approach. But very few can actually do it.
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